Reading Guide · The City Different

Best Books Set in Santa Fe

Four centuries of one of America's oldest capitals, on the page — Cather's territorial archbishop, the gambler La Tules of the Mexican period, the modern crime novel, and the histories that explain it all.

The best books set in Santa Fe begin with Willa Cather's Death Comes for the Archbishop (1927), the luminous novel of the territorial city, and run through Ruth Laughlin's The Wind Leaves No Shadow, Paul Horgan's The Centuries of Santa Fe, and Michael McGarrity's modern Kerney mysteries. Few American cities of Santa Fe's size have inspired so much serious writing — a consequence of four hundred years of layered history and a twentieth-century art colony that turned the place into a magnet for writers. This is a focused reading list for that city; for the whole state, see Best Books Set in New Mexico.

Published June 2026 · Curated by Josh Eldred, New Mexico Literacy Project

Novel · territorial Santa Fe · 1927

Death Comes for the Archbishop — Willa Cather

The essential Santa Fe novel. Cather follows Bishop Jean Latour — modeled on the real Archbishop Jean-Baptiste Lamy — as he builds a diocese across the newly American territory, culminating in the cathedral that still anchors the plaza. The desert light, the old parishes, and the city's Spanish-colonial bones have never been rendered more beautifully.

Historical novel · Mexican-period Santa Fe · 1948

The Wind Leaves No Shadow — Ruth Laughlin

The novel of Doña Gertrudis Barceló — "La Tules," the gambler and saloon-keeper who ran the monte tables of 1840s Santa Fe on the eve of the American conquest. A vivid recreation of the Mexican-period capital and one of the first novels to center a New Mexican woman.

Narrative history · all four centuries · 1956

The Centuries of Santa Fe — Paul Horgan

By the two-time Pulitzer historian, a narrative history of the city told through representative lives across its four centuries. The best single book for understanding how Santa Fe became Santa Fe, from the two-time Pulitzer winner who also wrote the Rio Grande epic Great River.

Narrative history · the conquest of New Mexico · 2006

Blood and Thunder — Hampton Sides

Sides, a Santa Fe–based narrative historian, tells the story of Kit Carson and the American conquest of the Southwest — much of it turning on Santa Fe as the territorial seat. Propulsive popular history that puts the city in its continental context.

Mystery series · contemporary Santa Fe · from 1996

The Kevin Kerney novels — Michael McGarrity

Beginning with Tularosa, McGarrity's long-running series follows lawman Kevin Kerney through contemporary Santa Fe and the wider state. The procedural backbone is wrapped around a real, lived-in northern New Mexico — the best modern crime fiction rooted in the city.

Mystery series · contemporary Santa Fe & the Navajo Nation

The Leaphorn, Chee & Manuelito novels — Anne Hillerman

Writing from Santa Fe, Anne Hillerman continues her father Tony's beloved series, bringing Officer Bernadette Manuelito to the foreground. The books range across northern New Mexico and the Navajo country with a strong contemporary sense of place.

History / memoir · Hispano Santa Fe · 1974

My Penitente Land — Fray Angélico Chávez

The Franciscan priest, poet, and foremost historian of Hispano New Mexico reflects on the land and faith of his people. For readers who want the city's deep Hispano-Catholic roots from an insider's pen, Fray Angélico is the indispensable Santa Fe voice.

Where to find them in Santa Fe

Santa Fe remains a great book town. Collected Works Bookstore downtown is the city's literary anchor and reading venue, and the city's used and antiquarian shops keep the older titles above in steady circulation. For the wider literary geography, the New Mexico Literary Atlas maps the writers and bookshops of Santa Fe and beyond.

Frequently asked questions

What is the best novel set in Santa Fe?

Willa Cather's Death Comes for the Archbishop (1927), set in the territorial city, is widely considered the greatest novel set in Santa Fe.

Are there mystery novels set in Santa Fe?

Yes — Michael McGarrity's Kevin Kerney series and Anne Hillerman's Leaphorn, Chee & Manuelito novels are both rooted in and around Santa Fe.

What should I read before visiting Santa Fe?

Death Comes for the Archbishop for the city's soul, The Wind Leaves No Shadow for the 1840s, and The Centuries of Santa Fe for the history.

Cite This Guide

Eldred, J. (June 2026). Best Books Set in Santa Fe. New Mexico Literacy Project.

https://newmexicoliteracyproject.org/best-books-set-in-santa-fe

Original curation by Josh Eldred. Licensed under CC BY 4.0.

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